Archaeologists unearth cellar in America’s first school for enslaved children

Archaeologists at the College of William & Mary in Virginia recently made a surprising discovery containing centuriesâ worth of history. During preliminary investigation work ahead of a building renovation project, archaeologists located the nearly complete foundation belonging to the Williamsburg Bray School.
The Bray School opened in 1760 and was North Americaâs first institution to educate both enslaved and free Black children. However, the Bray Schoolâs underlying goals offer a stark example of the dehumanizing ideologies that trace back to Americaâs earliest days.

âBiblically ordainedâ societal roles
Founded at the suggestion of Benjamin Franklin, the Williamsburg Bray School opened under the direction of local schoolteacher Ann Wager 16 years before the American Revolution. Beginning at 7 a.m. during the winter and 6 a.m. in the summer, Wager taught reading to all of the school attendeesâand needlework to the girls. The basis of education at the Bray School tied directly to Church of England doctrine, with a particular focus on understanding the Bible and the Anglican Book of Prayer. Wager often assigned homework on Sundays, to ensure her students âmay be prevented from spending the Lordâs Day profanely or idly.â Colonial Williamsburgâs official site for the Bray School notes that 93 percent of the 3 to 10 year-old students were enslaved, but only 86 names have been identified in records.
The Bray Schoolâs founders werenât abolitionists. The institutionâs primary motive was to convince Black students that their subordinate societal roles were biblically ordained. âThese enslaved individuals helped to maintain their enslaversâ households and contributed to their businesses,â explains the museum curators. âIn some cases, enslavers might have hoped the skills they developed at the school would make them âmore useful to their Owners.ââ
Despite the Bray Schoolâs objective, at least one child found other uses for his education. In 1774, an enslaved former student named Isaac Bee escaped his plantation. A discerning characteristic mentioned in the public notice of his escape? âHe can read.â
From schoolhouse to dorm to dig site
The Bray School moved to another location in 1765 before finally closing in 1774. But the building itself received multiple expansions under various owners until the early 20th century. In 1930, the structure was relocated onto the William & Mary campus and renamed Brown Hall, where it served as a dormitory for some of the nationâs first women to attend college. By that point, the building was nearly unrecognizable and its earliest purpose was lost to history.
It would take years for historians and archaelogists to confirm Brown Hallâs true identity over the course of multiple digs starting in 2011. The original structure was carefully exhumed from its surrounding add-ons and transported a half-mile to its current home in Colonial Williamsburg in 2023. Although, relocators apparently left a portion of the earliest buildingâand some newer additionsâat its former address on William & Maryâs campus.
Experts first detected evidence of the original 18th-century structural remains earlier this year ahead of plans to renovate the site. Subsequent excavation work revealed not only the Bray Schoolâs nearly complete foundation, but a roughly 36-by-18-foot cellar.
âIt looks like the cellar was a partial cellar, and had different floor levels potentially,â W&M Center for Archaeological Research researcher Tom Higgins said in a statement. âItâs not a brick-lined cellarâit was probably dug soon after the foundations were laid.ââŻ

Some of the earliest artifacts recovered during the dig date back nearly three centuries and include colonoware potteryâhandmade ceramics frequently found in enslaved and Indigenous communities. Archaeologists also noted items representative of the siteâs uses after the Bray School closed. Dorm residents left reminders of everyday life such as pencil fragments, buttons, jewelry, and even home decor. One glass shard clearly depicts Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom, war, justice, and the arts.
âWe know that the girls at Brown Hall were furnishing their dorms. So maybe they were bringing in things like this,â said senior researcher Michele Brumfield.
But while Brown Hall represented a pivotal moment in the struggle for womenâs rights, the structureâs original purpose is more complicated. The public will soon be able to see some of the artifacts on display at William & Mary, while the relocated Bray School is opening to Colonial Williamsburg visitors. Taken altogether, the building and relics represent some of the countryâs most complex, difficult, and painful facets.